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Angama Mara Review — Is This Kenya’s Finest Safari Lodge?
5 min read

Angama Mara Review — Is This Kenya’s Finest Safari Lodge?

Angama Mara sits on the edge of the Great Rift Valley, 300 metres above the Masai Mara. The view from the main deck — an unbroken sweep of savannah stretching to the horizon, the Mara River threading through it — is one of the most famous in African hospitality. It is the view that launched a thousand Instagram posts and a fair number of marriage proposals. But a view does not make a safari lodge. After two stays and dozens of clients sent there, I can tell you what Angama Mara actually delivers once the view has settled into the background. The Location — Why It Matters Angama Mara is located on the Oloololo Escarpment, on the western boundary of the Masai Mara National Reserve. This is significant for two reasons. First, the escarpment gives the lodge its defining characteristic — that elevated position, suspended between the sky and the plains below. Second, and more importantly for the safari experience, the western Mara is where many of the river crossings during the Great Migration take place. The Mara River runs directly below the lodge. During Migration season (July to October), guests at Angama can be at the river within a 30-minute drive. During the rest of the year, the western Mara offers excellent resident game viewing — lion, leopard, cheetah, elephant and buffalo are all present year-round. The area is less visited than the central Mara Triangle, which means fewer vehicles at sightings. The Tented Suites There are 30 tented suites in two camps of 15, set into the hillside below the main area. Each tent has floor-to-ceiling glass on the valley-facing side — a design choice that would feel wrong anywhere else but here is justified entirely. You wake to the view. You fall asleep to it. The canvas and glass combination creates an experience that is both immersed in the bush and protected from it. The tents are spacious (approximately 100 square metres), well-designed, and feel considerably more refined than most safari accommodation. The bathrooms are generous. The mini-bar is complimentary. The Wi-Fi works, though using it feels slightly like checking your phone during a cathedral service. One detail worth noting: the walk from the main area to the tents is steep. Angama is built on a hillside, and the paths descend significantly. This is not a flat-ground camp. It is not prohibitive — the paths are well-maintained and there are vehicles available — but it is worth knowing if mobility is a consideration. “Angama changed what I thought a safari camp could be. It is not roughing it in luxury. It is genuine refinement, suspended above the Mara.” — Manny, Adventure & Safari Specialist The Guiding Guiding at Angama is excellent. The guides are Maasai and Kenyan, experienced, and genuinely knowledgeable about both the ecology and the local culture. Game drives are in custom-built Land Cruisers with pop-up roofs. The maximum is 6 guests per vehicle, which is standard for luxury Kenya camps. What sets Angama apart on the guiding front is the bush breakfasts and the flexibility. Guides will adjust the drive to what is happening in the reserve on any given morning — if there is a kill nearby, you go. If the river crossing is active, you go. The schedule serves the wildlife, not the other way around. The Photographic Studio Angama has an on-site photographic studio staffed by a professional photographer. This is one of the features that sets it apart from other Mara camps. Guests can borrow professional camera equipment (including long telephoto lenses), get in-field guidance during game drives, and have their images processed and printed at the studio. For keen photographers, this alone is a reason to choose Angama over comparable lodges. Dining Dining at Angama is varied, well-executed and served in constantly changing locations. Breakfast on the deck overlooking the valley. Lunch in the shamba (garden). Dinner under the stars, or in the boma (outdoor enclosure), or occasionally as a bush dinner out in the reserve itself. The food is a blend of Kenyan and international, with a strong emphasis on local ingredients — the shamba grows herbs and vegetables on site. The quality is a clear step above what most safari camps deliver. It is not Soneva Fushi-level fine dining, but it is genuinely excellent and consistently surprising for a property in the middle of the Masai Mara. Who It’s For — and Who It’s Not For Angama is for: Couples. Honeymooners who want safari and romance in one place. Photographers. Repeat visitors to Kenya who want the finest camp in the western Mara. Travellers who value design and atmosphere as much as wildlife. Angama is not for: Families with young children (minimum age is 5, and the steep terrain makes it impractical for toddlers). Travellers who want a flat, easy-access camp. Anyone who prioritises the Mara Conservancies’ off-road driving — Angama is in the National Reserve where vehicles must stay on established tracks. The Verdict Angama Mara is, in my view, the finest property in the Masai Mara for a particular kind of traveller — one who values design, atmosphere and that extraordinary elevated position as much as the wildlife below. For that traveller, there is nowhere better.

Botswana vs Kenya: Which African Safari Is Right for You?
5 min read

Botswana vs Kenya: Which African Safari Is Right for You?

This is the safari decision that keeps coming up. Both Kenya and Botswana deliver extraordinary wildlife encounters. Both are among the finest safari destinations on earth. But they are fundamentally different experiences — in landscape, in camp style, in wildlife density, in price, and in what they ask of you as a traveller. I have spent months in both countries across fifteen years. Here is my honest, no-agenda comparison. The Feel — What Each Country Is Actually Like Kenya is vast, varied and dramatic. The Masai Mara is rolling savannah stretching to the horizon. Amboseli has Kilimanjaro as a permanent backdrop. Laikipia is semi-arid bush country with a completely different character. Kenya gives you variety within a single trip — you can experience three genuinely different ecosystems in a two-week safari. Botswana is defined by water. The Okavango Delta is a 20,000-square-kilometre inland delta that floods annually, creating a mosaic of channels, islands, lagoons and floodplains. Chobe has the highest concentration of elephants in Africa. The Makgadikgadi Pans are lunar in their emptiness. Botswana is quieter, more exclusive, and more expensive — by design. If Kenya is a symphony — loud, varied, dramatic — Botswana is a string quartet: intimate, refined, and quietly extraordinary. “Kenya gives you the spectacle. Botswana gives you the intimacy. Both change you. They just change you differently.” — Nick, Africa & Safari Specialist Wildlife Kenya: Wildlife density in the Masai Mara is arguably the highest in Africa. You will see the Big Five. You will see them frequently. The Great Migration (July–October) brings 1.5 million wildebeest and the predators that follow them. Kenya is the place for volume, drama and the classic safari photograph — lion on a kopje, cheetah in the golden grass, Mara River crossings. Botswana: Wildlife encounters in Botswana are less frequent but more intimate. A walking safari in the Delta, with a Mokoro canoe glide through lily-covered channels, followed by an elephant herd crossing a floodplain — this is Botswana at its best. Wild dog sightings are more common than in Kenya. Leopard sightings in the Moremi are excellent. The elephants in Chobe are the most dramatic herds I have ever seen — thousands strong, wading across the river. Winner: Kenya for sheer volume and the Migration spectacle. Botswana for intimate, uncrowded encounters and the water-based safari experience. Camp Style & Exclusivity Kenya: Kenya has the full range — from excellent value mid-range camps to the ultra-luxury end (Angama Mara, andBeyond Bateleur, Cottar’s 1920s). The Mara Conservancies (private conservancies bordering the national reserve) offer exclusivity that the reserve itself cannot — off-road driving, night drives, walking safaris, and far fewer vehicles. Botswana: Botswana has deliberately positioned itself as a high-value, low-volume destination. Camp sizes are smaller (typically 8–16 guests). Prices are higher. The result is genuine exclusivity — you will rarely share a sighting with another vehicle. The government limits tourism numbers through high park fees and camp size restrictions. This is intentional, and it works. Winner: Botswana, for guaranteed exclusivity. Kenya matches it in the private conservancies but not in the national reserve, which can be busy during peak Migration season. Getting There Kenya: Direct flights from London to Nairobi take approximately 8.5 hours (British Airways, Kenya Airways). From Nairobi, a domestic flight to the Masai Mara takes 45 minutes. Total travel time from Heathrow to your camp: approximately 12–14 hours. Straightforward. Botswana: There are no direct flights from the UK to Botswana. The most common routes are via Johannesburg (approximately 11 hours to JNB, then 2 hours to Maun or Kasane) or via Nairobi. Internal transfers within Botswana are almost always by light aircraft. Total travel time: 16–20 hours. More complex, more expensive, more time-consuming. Winner: Kenya, significantly. The direct London–Nairobi flight makes Kenya one of the most accessible safari destinations in Africa. Value Kenya: Kenya offers genuine value at every level. A luxury safari in the Mara Conservancies — private camp, full-board, game drives — costs from £400–700 per person per night. At the top end (Angama Mara, Cottar’s), expect £800–1,200. A 7-night luxury safari including flights from the UK starts from approximately £4,500–6,000 per person. Botswana: Botswana is expensive by design. A luxury camp in the Okavango Delta costs £700–1,500 per person per night. At the top end (Mombo, Jao, DumaTau), expect £1,500–2,500. A 7-night safari including international and internal flights starts from approximately £7,000–12,000 per person. The internal light aircraft transfers add £500–1,000 alone. Winner: Kenya, for value at every level. You can have a world-class safari in Kenya for roughly half the cost of a comparable trip in Botswana. Best Time to Visit Kenya: July to October for the Migration. January to March for green season photography and Amboseli. Good year-round in Laikipia. Botswana: May to October for the Delta flood season (the water rises, concentrating wildlife on islands). July to October for peak wildlife viewing. The green season (November to March) is beautiful but many camps are inaccessible. The Verdict — Choose Kenya If / Choose Botswana If Both countries deliver world-class safari. The choice comes down to what kind of experience you want, and a conversation with one of our Africa specialists will settle it in twenty minutes.

Soneva Fushi, Baa Atoll: Why It Remains the Finest Resort in the Maldives
6 min read

Soneva Fushi, Baa Atoll: Why It Remains the Finest Resort in the Maldives

I have reviewed over forty Maldives resorts in seven years. I have slept in overwater villas at Velaa and woken to glass floors filled with rays. I have had private chefs at One&Only and spa treatments suspended above the lagoon at Four Seasons Landaa Giraavaru. I am not easily impressed by the Maldives anymore. Which makes what I am about to write more significant, not less: Soneva Fushi is still the one. The Case Against Novelty Soneva Fushi opened in 1995. In Maldives terms, this makes it ancient. Dozens of resorts have opened since with larger pools, more dramatic architecture, more Michelin-starred consultants. Several of them are extraordinary. None of them have yet made the experience at Soneva Fushi feel dated. The reason is that Soneva did not build a resort. It established a philosophy — and then built the physical environment to serve it. No shoes. No news. No clocks. These are not quirks. They are commitments. And they create something that no amount of architectural brilliance can manufacture: genuine decompression. “The Maldives is not about the resort. It is about which version of yourself you want to be for seven days. Soneva Fushi answers that question better than anywhere else I have stayed.” — Anna, Indian Ocean & Wellness Specialist What Soneva Fushi Actually Is Soneva Fushi sits on Kunfunadhoo island in the Baa Atoll — a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve that contains Hanifaru Bay, the world’s most spectacular manta ray feeding ground. The island itself is covered in dense tropical jungle, which the architects have worked around rather than cleared. Villas sit within the vegetation, not above it. There are 57 villas. This matters. At peak capacity, Soneva Fushi holds approximately 150 guests on an island large enough that you will regularly walk for twenty minutes without encountering another person. The sense of space is not a design trick. It is genuine. The transfer from Malé is approximately 30 minutes by seaplane, operating between 6:30am and 4pm. If your flight lands after 4pm, you will need to overnight in Malé — a detail your specialist should plan around, and one we always do. The Villas: Crusoe vs Water Retreat The decision most clients agonise over is whether to choose a beach villa (the Crusoe Residence) or an overwater villa (the Water Retreat). Having stayed in both, my recommendation depends entirely on what you value. Choose the Crusoe Residence if you want the authentic Soneva experience as the founders intended it — direct beach access, the sense of having your own jungle hideaway, a larger footprint, and prices that are significantly lower. The pool is private. The garden is genuinely wild. You fall asleep to the sound of the ocean rather than over it. Choose the Water Retreat if the idea of waking up suspended above turquoise water is something you have imagined specifically. The glass floor panels are extraordinary. The water slide is absurd and magnificent. The sunsets from the deck are genuinely among the finest vantage points in the Maldives. Both categories start larger than you expect. The entry-level Crusoe Residence covers 280 square metres. The open-air bathroom alone is larger than many hotel rooms in London. If you book through HighStreet Holidays, your specialist can advise on which specific villa within each category gives you the best reef access or most privacy. The House Reef The house reef at Soneva Fushi is one of the three finest I have encountered in the Maldives, alongside the reef at Gili Lankanfushi and the outer reefs accessible from Four Seasons Landaa. This is not a trivial claim. Most Maldives resorts have a house reef. Most house reefs are pleasant. Soneva’s is genuinely remarkable. The reef begins immediately at the beach edge and drops to 25 metres within a short swim. In a single snorkel on my most recent visit I saw four hawksbill turtles, two white-tip reef sharks, a napoleon wrasse of extraordinary size, and a manta ray passing in the blue water below. None of this required a boat trip or a guide. For divers, the PADI centre is excellent, and Hanifaru Bay — the seasonal manta ray feeding aggregation accessible by a 20-minute boat ride — is as close to a religious experience as marine wildlife can offer. If your dates fall between May and October, this alone justifies the choice of Baa Atoll. Dining: Six Restaurants Done Right Soneva Fushi operates six distinct dining venues, which would be unremarkable at a resort of this calibre if they were merely adequate. They are not. Fresh in the Garden — the flagship, set within a working kitchen garden — serves breakfast and dinner of a quality that would hold its own in any European capital. So Ambitious, the overwater fine dining restaurant, is the one to book for a special evening. The glass floor is a feature that works — there is something genuinely arresting about eating above a living reef. The tasting menus change monthly and rotate guest chefs from around the world. The Den deserves its own paragraph. It is an open-air cinema showing films nightly, adjacent to a chocolate room and ice cream parlour that operates twenty-four hours a day with over forty flavours. It is the most talked-about single feature of any resort I have visited, and it costs nothing beyond your room rate. The Observatory Soneva Fushi employs resident astronomers. Every evening, after dinner, they set up at the observatory and invite guests to spend as long as they wish looking at a sky that has not a single source of light pollution in any direction. The experience, on my last visit, reduced a client to near-silence for twenty minutes. He told me afterwards it was the most moved he had been by anything in five years. There is a particular kind of luxury that is not about comfort or service or the quality of the champagne. It is about context — about being reminded of scale. Soneva Fushi has understood this longer than almost any other luxury operator on earth. Verdict & Who It’s For Soneva Fushi is not the right choice for every Maldives traveller. If you want ultra-contemporary architecture, Velaa Private Island has it in abundance. If you want a resort so small it feels like a private house, Gili Lankanfushi’s thirty-six villas come closer. If you want the finest dive operation in the archipelago, Four Seasons Landaa Giraavaru has an argument. But if you want to understand what the Maldives was always capable of being — before it became a genre, before the infinity pool was a cliché, before “barefoot luxury” became a marketing phrase — then Soneva Fushi is the place. It remains the original, and in most of the ways that matter, it remains the best.

From the Maldives Specialist

The Maldives is about which version of yourself you want to be for seven days.
Travel specialist

From the Africa Specialist

A safari is the only holiday where you go to be genuinely surprised.
James Okafor

From the Founder

Travel can be more personal, more considered, and more genuine.
Monis · Founder

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